Summited via the Ingrham Direct on an amazingly sunny day. A 4-person rope team broke through a bench into a cravase only 20 minutes after my team crossed it. I punced through in another up to my knees. The day before I summited a guide fell into a steam vent on the summit and got airlifed out.

Great stretch of weather. An AAI client broke the snowbridge in Ingraham's first big crevasse and the incident turned away 13 climbers. Another member went down 200 meters from the summit with cerebral edema. After another member bonked in the middle of the summit crater, I was the only one to stand atop the true summit from our team of four.

A dozen teams turned back that morning due to the lightning storm that had pickets and ice screws buzzing and sparking in the night. Shrouded by clouds, lightning exploded all around but we raced on through the storm for three hours before it subsided to pitch black winds. When the morning finally came, only one other party of 12, the Climb for Cancer Foundation, made the summit. This trip kicked ass. 10 years and one week earlier, my best friend died in my arms at Camp Schurman from a lethal asthma attack and this trip marked my only time back to Rainier since. Very emotional summit for me. Epic in every sense of the climb!

First try on the fuhrer finger....MASSIVE slab avalanche on the lower wilson kept us down low and we made the decision to bail. 2nd try on the dc due to time constraints....turned back at 13,200 feet due to a member coming down with symptoms of AMS and whiteout conditions. Def could of summited. back in 09 for lib ridge and the finger.

My climbing partners and I all bought plane tickets two months before our trip to Rainier and couldn't have timed it with the weather any better.
Had three beautiful days while we were up there and summit day was very clear. Gib Ledges was in great condition. High winds (75mph+) and a whiteout started soon after we returned to Camp Muir from the summit.
Descended to Paradise in a whiteout the following day.
Amazing trip!

awesome climb!!! I climbed with a large group through RMI and we were the only group on the mountain and we had good weather!!!! You can't ask for more than that, but it did get pretty windy at the summit.

Denali Prep trip. After living in Seattle and staring at Rainier for 34 years it was funny to have to fly back to Seattle (after moving to Michigan) to climb it. Took the Emmons Glacier Route and had an uneventual trip except for the Scarpa's that made hamburger out of my feet .... note to self .... not good to break in new boots on Rainier!

This was my second summit of Rainier. This was done with my outdoor Group S.O.L.A.R from Michigan. We had two rope teams of 3. All were succesful. The weather was great the whole climb. We camped just below Muir and then at Ingraham flats. This trip was different from my last in that above the Cleaver, we had to traverse ccw around the mountain about 0.5 miles to avoid Cevasses.

This was my first experience with Alpine / Glacier mountaineering. Three skydiving friends and I did the 4 day custom climb with RMI on the Disappointment cleaver route. We had great guides, Cory Ravio and Gary Talcot. The first day we hiked up the Muir Snowfield from Paradise to just below Camp Muir. The next day we made a short hike to Camp Muir (10,000 feet) and practiced falls and learned rope travel. We then continued up another 1,000 feet to Ingraham Flats at 11,000 feet. We went to bed early, 6pm, for a 12am summit push. At 12am, our guides told us we were waiting for the gusting 60mph winds to calm down before climbing. We eventually started climbing at 3am. With a full moon, and twilight at 4am, we hardly used our headlamps. The cleaver was very icy that morning. The pick of my Ice axe barely made a dent in the ice on the cleaver. Scary. By the time we made it to the top of the cleaver, the sun was up, still the winds were gusting 40mph. We summited by 8am. The crater was less windy than the actually summit. We had two rope teams. (two guides, 4 from michigan, and a son and mother from Seatle) Four of us had enough energy to sign the summit log and stand on the actual summit on liberty ridge. It was only a 5 min hike extra, big deal. Since it was a very clear day, and just after the summer solsist. The snow/ice warmed up very fast. We didn't stay long on the summit as a result. Hazzards of ice and rock fall. By the time we got to the Cleaver, the previous ice turned into a silkly/slippery mess. We moved fast at this point to avoid rock and ave 's. Over all, I had a great time. Took great photos.

Very nice climb, spent last night camped on the crater just below the summit. Conditions were not quite formed yet for ice. It was more of a snow slog, but still lots of fun! Glissading descent a blast! Climbed with Pablo Puruncajas.

Reached the summit on the forth day of an expedition training course. (Just loved being the "victim" in 200+ foot cravase with rookie belayers on the other end). Excellent training regardless. Summit cloud covered the mountain upon our arrival at Columbia Crest. Good news was the weather broke when we arrived at the sign in box on the other side of the crater. Mostly clear on the decent. WHAT A VIEW!!!